Belize’s barrier reef system, including a deep marine cave known as the Great Blue Hole, is the subject of a recent study in which researchers used 20 years of NASA satellite data to assess the risk to coral reefs from higher temperatures and murky water. Credits: Adobe Stock/James
Researchers created a toolkit for
determining the clarity and surface temperature of coastal waters. The data is
freely accessible data and can help assess reefs around the world.
Using two decades
of NASA satellite measurements stored in the cloud, scientists recently
assessed the vulnerability of Belize’s renowned coral reefs to bleaching and
collapse. The findings could help management authorities protect the reefs from
human impacts such as development, overfishing, pollution, and climate change.
The 185-mile-long (298-kilometer-long)
barrier reef system off the coast of Belize encompasses vibrant marine
environments that support thousands of animal and plant species and drive the
Central American country’s largest industry, tourism. The system is one of
about 1,200 UNESCO World Heritage sites around the world.
In a study published in Frontiers in
Remote Sensing, the
scientists ranked 24 marine protected areas off the Belize coast based on the
risks coral face from murky water and rising temperatures. The study also
outlined how researchers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California and counterparts in Belize used free, cloud-based data on Google
Earth Engine in their analysis.
“We depend on the reef for so many things,
so conserving these resources is important,” said Emil Cherrington, a native
Belizean and co-author of the paper. He is a research scientist at the
University of Alabama in Huntsville and a co-investigator on the Belize
Sustainable Development Goal project, a NASA effort to use Earth observation
data to protect the country’s marine ecosystems. “Studies like this are giving
the government of Belize more tools for conserving the resources that the
country has.”
Researchers at JPL, alongside colleagues in Belize, used 20 years of data from MODIS, an instrument on NASA’s Aqua satellite, to assess risk to Belize’s coral reefs due to human activity and climate change. MODIS captured this image of the Yucatán Peninsula, including Belize, in February 2022. Credits: NASA
Easy to Use, Easy to Understand
The hard skeletons of stony coral
form the structure of the barrier reef, which keeps Belize’s shallow coastal
waters calm and enables marine life to thrive there. Coral needs clear water
and consistent temperatures to grow. Changes in both factors can affect the
survival of the symbiotic algae that live in the coral and provide food. When
the algae leave or die, the coral lose their color, a phenomenon called
bleaching. Coral can survive under these conditions, but the changes can put it
at greater risk of mortality.
To gather data on water clarity and
surface temperature over large areas, researchers turned to the Moderate
Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), which was developed at NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and launched in 2002 as one
of several instruments aboard the agency’s Aqua satellite. In addition to
being available from NASA, MODIS images and data sets are accessible on Google
Earth Engine.
Analyzing MODIS imagery collected
from 2002 to 2022, the researchers developed a vulnerability index that
characterizes the risk to coral in the marine environments that Belize is
managing in order to protect biodiversity. The team examined sea surface
temperatures in each protected area and assigned a number from 1 to 6 based on
how low or high the averages were relative to the norms. They did the same for
water clarity. The 1 to 6 ratings were then combined to get the coral index,
from 2 to 12. Higher numbers
signify greater risk.
Of the 24 marine protected areas ranked in the study of the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System and mapped here, Port Honduras Marine Reserve off southern Belize had the highest coral vulnerability score: 10 out of 12. The study used NASA satellite data taken between 2002 and 2022. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Port Honduras Marine Reserve, a 156-square-mile (40,469-hectare) protected area in southern Belize, showed the highest coral vulnerability score: 10 out of 12. Based on the index, the study also flagged Swallow Caye Wildlife Sanctuary, Sapodilla Cayes Marine Reserve, and Corozal Bay Wildlife Sanctuary as areas for concern.
All the protected areas in the study are
included in the Belize Coastal Zone Management Plan, a framework to guide
Belize’s government on how to support the sustainable use of the country’s
coastal areas. The country’s Coastal Zone Management Authority & Institute,
which is tasked with implementing and monitoring policies that govern Belize’s
coastal waters, created the last plan in 2016. The new paper, along with other
Belize-focused research sponsored through NASA’s Earth Applied Sciences program, will inform the next plan,
which is currently being revised, said Samir Rosado, a co-author of the study
and a coastal planner at the management authority.
“A lot of our cultural identity arises
from the marine areas,” Rosado said. “It’s a measure of pride – wherever
Belizeans go, people know the coral reefs.”
What’s
Next
The vulnerability index could be used for
other reef systems around the world, and it could be modified to incorporate
additional water variables such as acidity, said Ileana Callejas, the paper’s
lead author and a graduate student at the University of California, Los
Angeles. Rising ocean acidity – a consequence of climate change resulting from
greater concentrations of dissolved carbon dioxide in the water – threatens
coral health.
“We were trying to make the data and our
approach as accessible as possible,” said Callejas, who started the research
during an internship at JPL. “Our main purpose was to make a toolkit that would
be easy to use, that would produce an index that was easy to understand, and
that could be used to see which marine protected areas may need closer
attention.”
While the historical record and
traditional field testing by boat have given coastal management authorities a
sense of the most vulnerable areas, satellites can shine light on other spots
that may be less accessible or more costly to reach, said Nicole Auil Gomez, a
paper co-author and director of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Belize
Country Program.
“It's going to become more useful in the future in terms of telling us more about areas we already monitor,” she said. “And for areas we don’t monitor, we have some tools now to be able to learn more.”
Andrew Wang / Jane J. Lee
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Source: Scientists Use NASA Satellite Data to Determine Belize Coral Reef Risk | NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment